Quillow

Quillow

Quillow is an innovative AI-powered note-taking application designed to streamline the transformation of unstructured notes into a searchable knowledge base. With capabilities for capturing and organi

FreemiumWritingDesignResearchWeb, iOS, Android
Quillow screenshot

What is Quillow?

Quillow is an AI-powered note-taking app that converts scattered notes into an organise, searchable knowledge base. It captures information from multiple sources including SMS and WhatsApp, then uses AI to automatically sort, summarise, and index your notes. The tool is designed for people who take lots of notes but struggle to find or use them later. It works well for researchers, students, professionals who need to manage information across projects, and anyone building a personal knowledge system.

Key Features

Note capture from SMS and WhatsApp

Receive and save notes directly from messaging apps without manual transfer

Automatic indexing

Notes are indexed automatically so you can search your knowledge base quickly

AI-generated summaries

The tool creates summary cards from your notes to help you review information at a glance

Q&A function

Ask questions about your notes and get answers pulled from your knowledge base

Focus mode

A distraction-free writing environment to help you concentrate when taking notes

Custom categories and commands

Organize notes your way with personalise tagging and command shortcuts

Pros & Cons

Advantages

  • Captures notes from messaging apps, which most note apps don't do
  • AI handles the sorting and summarising work, saving you time on organization
  • Freemium model means you can test it without paying
  • Built-in search and Q&A function makes it easy to retrieve information you've saved

Limitations

  • Limited information available about offline functionality or data storage options
  • It's unclear how much of the feature set is available on the free tier versus paid plans

Use Cases

Researchers collecting notes from interviews, articles, and conversations across different platforms

Students capturing lecture notes, research materials, and quick thoughts from phone messages

Product managers gathering user feedback and feature requests from messaging apps and notes

Writers and journalists organising quotes, ideas, and sources for articles or books

Professionals building a personal reference library of work-related information and contacts